Galey M L, van der Ent A, Iqbal M C M, Rajakaruna N
Center for Water and Environment, Natural Resources Research Institute, University of Minnesota, Duluth, MN, 55811, USA.
Centre for Mined Land Rehabilitation, Sustainable Minerals Institute, The University of Queensland, Brisbane, QLD, Australia.
Bot Stud. 2017 Dec;58(1):18. doi: 10.1186/s40529-017-0167-9. Epub 2017 Apr 3.
Globally, ultramafic outcrops are renowned for hosting floras with high levels of endemism, including plants with specialised adaptations such as nickel or manganese hyperaccumulation. Soils derived from ultramafic regoliths are generally nutrient-deficient, have major cation imbalances, and have concomitant high concentrations of potentially phytotoxic trace elements, especially nickel. The South and Southeast Asian region has the largest surface occurrences of ultramafic regoliths in the world, but the geoecology of these outcrops is still poorly studied despite severe conservation threats. Due to the paucity of systematic plant collections in many areas and the lack of georeferenced herbarium records and databased information, it is not possible to determine the distribution of species, levels of endemism, and the species most threatened. However, site-specific studies provide insights to the ultramafic geoecology of several locations in South and Southeast Asia. The geoecology of tropical ultramafic regions differs substantially from those in temperate regions in that the vegetation at lower elevations is generally tall forest with relatively low levels of endemism. On ultramafic mountaintops, where the combined forces of edaphic and climatic factors intersect, obligate ultramafic species and hyperendemics often occur. Forest clearing, agricultural development, mining, and climate change-related stressors have contributed to rapid and unprecedented loss of ultramafic-associated habitats in the region. The geoecology of the large ultramafic outcrops of Indonesia's Sulawesi, Obi and Halmahera, and many other smaller outcrops in South and Southeast Asia, remains largely unexplored, and should be prioritised for study and conservation.
在全球范围内,超镁铁质露头以拥有高度特有性的植物群而闻名,包括具有特殊适应性的植物,如镍或锰的超积累植物。源自超镁铁质风化层的土壤通常营养缺乏,存在主要阳离子失衡的问题,并且伴有高浓度的潜在植物毒性微量元素,尤其是镍。南亚和东南亚地区拥有世界上最大面积的超镁铁质风化层露头,但尽管面临严重的保护威胁,这些露头的地质生态学仍研究不足。由于许多地区缺乏系统的植物采集,以及缺乏地理参考标本馆记录和数据库信息,无法确定物种的分布、特有程度以及受威胁最大的物种。然而,针对特定地点的研究为南亚和东南亚几个地点的超镁铁质地质生态学提供了见解。热带超镁铁质地区的地质生态学与温带地区有很大不同,因为较低海拔处的植被通常是高森林,特有程度相对较低。在超镁铁质山顶,土壤和气候因素的综合作用相互交织,专性超镁铁质物种和高度特有物种经常出现。森林砍伐、农业发展、采矿以及与气候变化相关的压力因素,导致该地区与超镁铁质相关的栖息地迅速且前所未有的丧失。印度尼西亚苏拉威西岛、奥比岛和哈马黑拉岛的大型超镁铁质露头以及南亚和东南亚许多其他较小露头的地质生态学在很大程度上仍未得到探索,应优先进行研究和保护。